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Amnesty International head calls lack of prosecutions for Marikana massacre a pathetic failure

Durban-born Kumi Naidoo says the fact there has been no accountability for the killings of striking Lonmin mineworkers is entrenching a culture of impunity

Policemen surround the dead and wounded immediately after the shooting at Marikana mine.     File photo: REUTERS
Policemen surround the dead and wounded immediately after the shooting at Marikana mine. File photo: REUTERS

The lack of prosecutions and decent reparations for the Marikana massacre was a "pathetic failure" on the part of the South African government‚ Amnesty International’s new secretary-general‚ Kumi Naidoo‚ said on Thursday.

The fact that there was as yet no accountability for the killings of striking Lonmin mineworkers in 2012 was entrenching a culture of impunity‚ and those who gave the orders for police to shoot workers should have faced prosecution‚ he said.

"I think it is a terrible statement that after six years there is also no meaningful compensation offered to the families affected. They have dragged their feet for far too long already."

Speaking at the announcement of his appointment as the head of the largest human rights movement globally‚ Durban-born Naidoo said that on the day of the massacre he was taking part in a protest against climate change in the Russian Arctic.

When he saw the footage of the shooting of the mineworkers in his own country‚ he could not believe it and thought it was a "bad joke".

For more on this story‚ please visit Times Select

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